![]() ![]() ![]() I am truly speechless at the level Remini is able to deliver. (This account made the news some years back as they have uploaded over five million historic photographs under Creative Commons it's a goldmine!) The test images I found were on the Internet Archive Book Images on Flickr and used under Creative Commons. The most testing environment I could imagine would be using it on images from the early 1900s, where there is a distinct lack of quality, sharpness, useful contrast, dynamic range, and a boatload of imperfections. ![]() Remini's blurb gives a vague sense of what it can do: "Remini engages state-of-art AI generative technology to bring professional film production level image enhancing and restoration technologies to our daily life." For a free app, that sounds like a load of old tosh, but I thought I'd put it through its paces. But not like most apps that purport to restore images where they apply some sharpening and noise reduction, this app generates detail that isn't there. rather than changing major elements of images, it's restoring them. However, this week, I've seen a quite different function of A.I. In 2020, I have spent a fair amount of time with Luminar products in particular as I've developed a relationship with them, and what they're doing is pretty singular. Then, in the last year, I've gradually seen the improvement and value of these tools. I had and have absolutely no issue with that, but I didn't feel these tools were aimed at me. ![]() I saw tools using A.I. for post-production of images as a time-saver for photographers who aren't particularly bothered about bleeding every last iota of quality out of their edits or true-to-life accuracy. ![]()
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